Hi Paul,
Here is a skeleton how to find out these throughputs (see
NetBackup_Commands_UNIX.pdf, for more help at
http://support.veritas.com/docs/268116):
bpdbjobs -all_columns | grep -i active
It's Field No. 15 as you can see below at the and of this email. Do a split in
perl... And then decide, what to do. The first field is jobid, you can cancel
this job via
bpdbjobs -cancel <jobid>
or suspend it with
bpdbjobs -suspend <jobid>.
-all_columns
Summary displays all columns. Some of the more useful fields of this
command are:
field2 = jobtype
(0=backup, 1=archive, 2=restore, 3=verify, 4=duplication, 5=import,
6=dbbackup, 7=vault)
field3 = state
(0=queued, 1=active, 2=requeued, 3=done)
field5 = policy
(The policy that this job is associated with.)
field6 = schedule
(The schedule that this job is associated with.)
field21 = subtype
(0=immediate, 1=scheduled, 2=user-initiated)
field24 = priority
(The priority assigned to this job, as configured in the policy
attributes.)
The output of this command consists of a single line, per backup job.
Each line of the output is a comma-delimited list in the following
format:
jobid,jobtype,state,status,class,schedule,client,server,started,el
apsed,ended,stunit,try,operation,kbytes,files,pathlastwritten,perc
ent,jobpid,owner,subtype,classtype,schedule_type,priority,group,ma
sterserver,retentionunits,retentionperiod,compression,kbyteslastwr
itten,fileslastwritten,filelistcount,[files]...,trycount,[trypid,t
rystunit,tryserver,trystarted,tryelapsed,tryended,trystatus,trysta
tusdescription,trystatuscount,[trystatuslines]...,trybyteswritten,
tryfileswritten]...
Refer to Example 1 for an example on how to interpret the -all_colums
output.
Regards Bernd
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